Freeland defends budget measures, as premiers push back on federal involvement

Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says she thinks unhappy premiers will come around on measures in the federal budget that touch on provincial legislation, even as they push back.

At an event in Toronto on Sunday, Freeland — who presented the federal budget on Tuesday — said the national government needs to push ahead on such issues as housing and that she was “extremely optimistic” premiers would choose to co-operate.

“Housing is a national challenge, and the federal government needs to be leading the charge,” she said.

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Is the ‘Seinfeld theory’ coming for Justin Trudeau’s political future?

The Trudeau government released its 2024 budget with a promise to bring “fairness for every generation” by pledging billions on housing and introducing a new capital gains tax on the wealthy, as part of its strategy to win back younger voters.

But former Liberal deputy prime minister John Manley doubts the major spending geared at a millennial and Gen Z audience will be enough to keep Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in power once election time rolls around.

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Immigration: ‘Some Canadians are beginning to question the multiculturalist model’

A 35% reduction in the number of permits granted to foreign students, imposition of an entry visa for Mexican travelers, questioning of the “massive” regularization of hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants… Under pressure from a public increasingly wary of migratory flows, the Canadian government has, since the beginning of the year, stepped up measures designed to show that it does not intend to be “overwhelmed.” These measures are at odds with the image of a country traditionally open to immigration (mainly economic, i.e. selective) and to a welcoming policy that Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau considers necessary “to ensure the country’s long-term growth.” Some 985,000 new permanent immigrants are expected by 2025.

Sociologist and professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Ottawa, Christian Bergeron, works on models for integrating minorities into society and has observed changes in public opinion regarding migration. Here, he explains how the nature of the immigration debate has changed in Canada, to the point of challenging one of the country’s founding principles: multiculturalism.

The debate about Multiculturalism is over. It is settled, it sucks.

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Can Trudeau’s budget restore ‘generational fairness’? Economists say don’t bet on it

“Everything that is created, built, served and sold in this country is increasingly being created, built, served and sold by Millennials and Gen Z,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as he announced what he called a budget focused on a quest for “generational fairness.”

“Their success is Canada’s success in the future, sure, but also right now. But the economy isn’t rewarding them the way it used to reward their parents and grandparents.

“That’s not right. That’s not fair.”

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Feds halt deportation of B.C.-based climate activist

Illegal alien climate asshole

A B.C.-based climate activist scheduled to be deported over the weekend has had his removal stayed after a federal minister intervened in his case.

Zain Haq, 23, was scheduled to be deported to his native Pakistan on April 22, while being nearly a year into a spousal sponsorship application with his B.C.-born wife. Haq, who co-founded the group Save Old Growth, caught the attention of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) in 2022 while protesting and speaking to the press about Canada’s climate policy.

h/t Mauser

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Canada’s immigration dilemma — not enough workers or not enough homes

The federal government’s decision to bring in fewer newcomers in the next few years due to the housing crunch could create labour shortages and inflationary pressures on some areas of the economy if the right balance isn’t maintained, says an analysis by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

I’ll take Zero Migrants for 500 Alex.

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GUNTER: The never-ending incompetence of the Trudeau Liberals

The fancy stats used by economists and business analysts are discouraging enough.

Since the Liberals came to office in 2015, business investment per worker is down, productivity is down, per capita Gross Domestic Product has fallen for six consecutive quarters, living standards have fallen (especially relative to those in the U.S.) and Tuesday’s Liberal budget unleashed a capital gains tax grab that will scare away as much as $20 billion more in investment and new jobs.

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Liberals set internal goal to narrow polling gap by five points come July: sources

Trailing badly in the polls, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has set an internal goal of narrowing the Conservative Party’s double-digit lead by five points every six months.

According to two sources with direct knowledge of the strategy, the Liberals are taking an incremental approach to climbing out of their deep hole in popularity. By July, the sources said, the Prime Minister’s Office is expecting to see the first material change in polling.

Who believes that a hated punk like Justin could pull that off?

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Liberal government turning to influencers to appeal to Canadian youth

Dennis Mathu and Stephanie Gordon first started posting financial-advice videos on YouTube three years ago — a side hustle that helped to scratch a creative itch.

They never imagined it would lead them down some of the most powerful political corridors in Canada.

Mathu and Gordon — Steph & Den, as they’re known online — were among several content creators invited to Tuesday’s federal budget lockup, where they got early access to Ottawa’s new spending blueprint.

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Liberal MPs fear Justin Trudeau’s budget is a gift to Pierre Poilievre — and that the Grits are shooting themselves in the foot

Worry is starting to set in. Days after Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled her government’s latest budget, with $39 billion in new spending and a $19-billion tax increase to help pay for it, there is concern among some Grit MPs that the Liberals are shooting themselves in the foot.

Some — in Liberal-Conservative swing ridings — worry that blue Liberals who’ve long griped Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spends too much money, will now give Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre a second look.

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‘GETTING WORSE’: Trudeau Liberals blamed for latest line of desperate workers in Toronto

Videos of massive lineups for job fairs and open calls in the GTA are commonplace on social media.

It’s a testament to just how competitive and exhausting the job market has become in recent years.

And the pricks in Ottawa still lie about the need for mass immigration.

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School That Bused International Students to MP Dong’s Riding Vote Invited to Event With Trudeau

MARKHAM, Ont.—The Toronto-area private school whose name came up prominently during the foreign interference inquiry for busing international students to the Liberal nomination vote of MP Han Dong in 2019 was invited to celebrate the Chinese New Year with the prime minister two years later.

The invitation was issued even as the prime minister and Liberal party organizers had been made aware of “irregularities” at the nomination vote by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) in 2019. The cited issues included international students being told to support Mr. Dong under “veiled threats” by the Chinese consulate.

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